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Eight Days in May - The Final Collapse of the Third Reich (Hardcover)
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Eight Days in May - The Final Collapse of the Third Reich (Hardcover)
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In a bunker deep below Berlin's Old Reich Chancellery, Adolf Hitler
and his new bride, Eva Braun, took their own lives just after 3:00
p.m. on April 30, 1945-Hitler by gunshot to the temple, Braun by
ingesting cyanide. But the Fuhrer's suicide did not instantly end
either Nazism or the Second World War in Europe. Far from it: the
eight days that followed were among the most traumatic in modern
history, witnessing not only the final paroxysms of bloodshed and
the frantic surrender of the Wehrmacht, but the total
disintegration of the once-mighty Third Reich. In Eight Days in
May, the award-winning historian and Hitler biographer Volker
Ullrich draws on an astonishing variety of sources, including
diaries and letters of ordinary Germans, to narrate a society's
descent into Hobbesian chaos. In the town of Demmin in the north,
residents succumbed to madness and committed mass suicide. In
Berlin, Soviet soldiers raped German civilians on a
near-unprecedented scale. In Nazi-occupied Prague, Czech insurgents
led an uprising in the hope that General George S. Patton would
come to their aid but were brutally put down by German units in the
city. Throughout the remains of Third Reich, huge numbers of people
were on the move, creating a surrealistic tableau: death marches of
concentration-camp inmates crossed paths with retreating Wehrmacht
soldiers and groups of refugees; columns of POWs encountered those
of liberated slave laborers and bombed-out people returning home. A
taut, propulsive narrative, Eight Days in May takes us inside the
phantomlike regime of Hitler's chosen successor, Admiral Karl
Doenitz, revealing how the desperate attempt to impose order
utterly failed, as frontline soldiers deserted and Nazi Party
fanatics called on German civilians to martyr themselves in a last
stand against encroaching Allied forces. In truth, however, the
post-Hitler government represented continuity more than change: its
leaders categorically refused to take responsibility for their
crimes against humanity, an attitude typical not just of the Nazi
elite but also of large segments of the German populace. The
consequences would be severe. Eight Days in May is not only an
indispensable account of the Nazi endgame, but a historic work that
brilliantly examines the costs of mass delusion.
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